"One has not only legal but moral responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws."
and..."Any law that uplifts human personality is just. Any law that degrades human personality is unjust."
These are not the only two within the letter, but just the two I saw first.
He wasn't writing to Birgingham jail, he was writing from the Birmingham jail, where he was being detained at the time, to his "fellow clergymen" of Alabama. To straight out answer your question, he was in Birmingham jail when he wrote the letter in question (it's called "Letter From a Birmingham Jail")
Letter from Birmingham Jail was written on the 16th of April 1963
Like a boss..
Parts of it yes.
Martin Luther King Jr.'s "Letter from Birmingham Jail" uses emotional appeal very effectively to make his readers feel the plight of African American people in part becauseit uses moving examples of the problems African American people dealt with.
He wasn't writing to Birgingham jail, he was writing from the Birmingham jail, where he was being detained at the time, to his "fellow clergymen" of Alabama. To straight out answer your question, he was in Birmingham jail when he wrote the letter in question (it's called "Letter From a Birmingham Jail")
Letter from Birmingham Jail was written on the 16th of April 1963
summrize letter of birningham jail
1963
He was with a Police who was on his side
Like a boss..
Parts of it yes.
(1963) A letter that Martin Luther King, Jr., addressed to his fellow clergymen while he was in jail in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963, after a nonviolent protest against racial segregation
Martin Luther King Jr.'s "Letter from Birmingham Jail" uses emotional appeal very effectively to make his readers feel the plight of African American people in part becauseit uses moving examples of the problems African American people dealt with.
wy u care
He wrote the letter. Didn't get it.
non-violant